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Charley Harper Ford Times Birds Mourning Birds

Original price was: $15.50.Current price is: $13.25. Yard

Birch Fabrics
Charley Harper Ford Times Birds Vol. 1
Mourning Dove
CH-333
  • 100% Cotton, Premium Quilting Poplin Fabric
  • Width: Approximately 44″ wide
  • Machine wash warm, cold rinse, and tumble dry low; do not bleach.

15 in stock

YD

Description

About Charley Harper from Wikipedia

During his career, Charley Harper illustrated numerous books, notably The Golden Book of Biology, magazines such as Ford Times, as well as many prints, posters, and other works. As his subjects are mainly natural, with birds prominently featured, Charley often created works for many nature-based organizations, among them the National Park ServiceCincinnati ZooCincinnati Nature CenterCornell Lab of Ornithology,[2] Hamilton County (Ohio) Park District, and Hawk Mountain Sanctuary in Pennsylvania. He also designed interpretive displays for Everglades National Park.

In a style he called “minimal realism”, Charley Harper captured the essence of his subjects with the fewest possible visual elements. When asked to describe his unique visual style, Charley responded:

When I look at a wildlife or nature subject, I don’t see the feathers in the wings, I just count the wings. I see exciting shapes, color combinations, patterns, textures, fascinating behavior, and endless possibilities for making interesting pictures. I regard the picture as an ecosystem in which all the elements are interrelated, interdependent, perfectly balanced, without trimming or unutilized parts; and herein lies the lure of painting; in a world of chaos, the picture is one small rectangle in which the artist can create an ordered universe.[4]

He contrasted his nature-oriented artwork with the realism of John James Audubon, drawing influence from CubismMinimalismEinsteinian physics and countless other developments in Modern art and science. His style distilled and simplified complex organisms and natural subjects, yet they are often arranged in a complex fashion. On the subject of his simplified forms, Harper noted:

I don’t think there was much resistance to the way I simplified things. I think everybody understood that. Some people liked it and others didn’t care for it. There’s some who want to count all the feathers in the wings and then others who never think about counting the feathers, like me.[5]

The results are bold, colorful, and often whimsical. The designer Todd Oldham wrote of Harper, “Charley’s inspired yet the accurate color sense is undeniable, and when combined with the precision he exacts on rendering only the most important details, one is always left with a sense of awe.”[6] Charley, on numerous examples, also went outside the medium of graphic art and included short prose poems for the artwork he made.

While every effort is made to represent color accurately, every monitor is different and we cannot guarantee the colors you see match the colors of actual fabric.

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